Universities could play a central role in addressing the UK’s dire levels of regional inequality, potentially through creating an “MIT of the North” or establishing “HE-FE systems” in deprived towns, according to the former head of the nation’s Civil Service.
Lord Kerslake, chair of the UK2070 Commission on regional inequality, told Times 中国A片 that “universities have been central to [the commission’s work], both in the analysis and being part of the solution as well”.
The commission – which has delivered two reports this year and will deliver its final report in January 2020 – was established by a partnership between the US Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, the universities of Manchester and Sheffield, and UCL.
It has an influential chair in Lord Kerslake, a crossbench peer who is advising the Labour Party on its “preparations for government”, chaired the recent Civic University Commission and is chair of governors at Sheffield Hallam University.
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The commission has published by Philip McCann, chair in urban and regional economics at the University of Sheffield, that ranked the UK 28th of 30 Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development countries on interregional inequality.
In its , the commission looked at policies on devolution that might “shift the dial” and advocated a “conscious government policy to rebalance, in the way that West and East Germany had” after reunification, said Lord Kerslake.
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Its recommendations also include the creation of an “MIT of the North” in which universities would be “pivotal”, he added.
The commission published a on the concept that argued that “despite having strong universities”, UK regions beyond the London-Oxford-Cambridge “golden triangle” have “yet to build an innovation-led-economy with sufficient strength, coherence and critical mass”. That piece called for the north to consider the model of the Greater Boston innovation economy, anchored by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Lord Kerslake highlighted the big increase in research spending being promised by both the Conservatives and Labour, saying “we have to try and shape that [investment] towards a more distributed model”, with funding spread across the regions.
But he also said that in boosting local economies “it’s got to be about Grimsby as well as graphene”, adding that “we do think universities have an important role in the addressing of the so-called ‘left behind’ towns”.
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That could mean universities “having a presence” in smaller towns, potentially via collaborations with further education colleges, Lord Kerslake said. Universities have “got to think about HE-FE systems”, he argued.
Or, he suggested, this could involve models like Sheffield Hallam’s South Yorkshire Futures, which aims to raise school attainment across Barnsley, Doncaster, Rotherham and Sheffield.
The UK has “chronically low investment and we have chronically low productivity…and one part of that is the underperformance [of the regions] outside of London and the south east”, Lord Kerslake warned.
Asked if the final report would make a recommendation about the right form of regional government for England, Lord Kerslake joked that “as soon as we start drawing lines on a map, everybody gets very agitated”. However, he said the commission would address “the principles by which you would design a regional government”.
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While many affluent areas of the south east backed Leave in the European Union referendum, many deindustrialised towns in the North also voted to “take back control” from a perceived remote political elite. So why has English devolution not figured more prominently in political debate following the referendum?
“Everything has been blotted out by Brexit; it’s a paradoxical point,” replied Lord Kerslake. “Thinking time has been squeezed out…all three parties have found it really hard to find the space for creative policy thinking on other issues.”
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